Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg loses $8.5b due to outage
Facebook's share price has been walloped by today's outage, stripping billions out of company CEO Mark Zuckerberg's personal fortune.
Business publication Forbes reported that Zuckerberg has lost US$5.9 billion ($8.5 billion) off the back of the global outage of Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp.
This still leaves Zuckerberg with a cool fortune of around US$117 billion.
The company's share price slipped 4.8 per cent off the back of the outage. Join Our Telegram for Steady updates, Click Mowesplash media
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porter Mark Stone explains the “strange coincidence” with Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram all being down this morning. Video / Sky News Australia
NZ HeFacebook's share price has been walloped by today's outage, stripping billions out of company CEO Mark Zuckerberg's personal fortune.
Business publication Forbes reported that Zuckerberg has lost US$5.9 billion ($8.5 billion) off the back of the global outage of Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp.
This still leaves Zuckerberg with a cool fortune of around US$117 billion.
The company's share price slipped 4.8 per cent off the back of the outage.
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The outage will also prove expensive for Facebook from a sales perspective. The company is understood to make around US$330 million a day from advertising sales - and this part of the business has been completely disabled by the blackout.
The company did not say what might be causing the outage, which began around 11.45am ET Monday (4.45am NZT today). Websites and apps often suffer outages of varying size and duration, but hours-long global disruptions are rare.
But this isn't the only factor weighing on Facebook stock at the moment.
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The company also faced damning revelations this week during a 60 Minutes television interview, which saw a former product manager, Frances Haugen, criticise the company for putting "profits over people".
Haugen will also testify at a Congressional hearing on Tuesday, US time.
At this stage, it is still unclear what has caused the Facebook outage.
The Wall Street Journal reported the problems appeared to be linked to a change that Facebook made to networking instructions for how the world accesses its systems, according to outside experts.
At this stage there is no evidence of this outage being caused by criminal activity
Jake Williams, chief technical officer of the cybersecurity firm BreachQuest, said that while foul play cannot be completely ruled out, chances were good that the outage is "an operational issue" caused by human error.
The New York Times has further reported that some Facebook employees who had returned to working in the office were also unable to enter buildings and conference rooms because their digital badges stopped working. Security engineers said they were hampered from assessing the outage because they could not get to server areas.
There are, however, signs that Facebook could soon become live again.
The company is reported to be in the process of reconnecting its service, so normal full transmission should be restored shortly.